Did you make this instructable?

The connector is a likely failure point if you have read errors. Perhaps solder on the connector from another flash drive? If you are truly desperate, you could try to solder the chip you want to save into an identical new flash drive.

"If you are truly desperate, you could try to solder the chip you want to save into an identical new flash drive." Will this really work? can I take the NAND Flash memory then solder it to another identical flash drive with smaller capacity(16GB NAND to new 2GB flash drive).

The drive does not respond at all. Looks like no power whatsoever. And I've tried it on multiple computers (PC and MAC, I know it shouldn't matter, but it didn't recognize sometimes when I would switch operating systems when it did work), multiple times. I might have to try to connect it to another flash drive. I'm getting desperate for the info that is on there :/ Thanks :)

Examine the PCB, maybe you are lucky and a small power surge only burnt through a 0 ohm resistor used as a fuse, meaning it would read open circuit with a multimeter and could be bridged shorted (but if a failed IC caused it this risks overcurrent through your USB port itself which might trip another fuse but at least it's often a resettable polyfuse. If the data is valuable, sent it to a data recovery center. If it is not, it's unlikely the problem is recoverable through easy (end-owner) methods.

Geek Squad knows best. Seriously, they're miracle workers. Try them, and if all else fails get out a microscope and look very closely and try to tell if you see a 1 or a 0 and slooooowly copy it back...